Friday, October 26, 2007

Homosexuality Does Exist in Nigeria

Homosexuality Does Exist in Nigeria
By Rowland Jide Macaulay, 2003


My name is Rowland Jide Macaulay. I was born to Nigerian parents. I have a good understanding of our culture and traditional values -- the expectation of an African child and the African family.

Tolerance remained at an angle to cultural expectations, and homosexuality is not one that is accepted in Africa, especially in Nigeria.

I spent my teenage years in Nigeria, where I first experienced my sexuality, although in great fear: the fear of being caught, the fear of sin, of commitment of an abomination. I grew up with a lot of guilt in my heart, I often prayed for forgiveness, sanctification and purification.

I spent my teenage years in Nigeria, where I first experienced my sexuality, although in great fear: the fear of being caught, the fear of sin, of commitment of an abomination. I grew up with a lot of guilt in my heart, I often prayed for forgiveness, sanctification and purification.

I grew up with my father who is a Christian leader and I must assure you he is a fine man, a learned man and a very good father. We love each other so much, but the culture and tradition of my tribe, the Yoruba tribe, meant that no matter how successful I become, how great a child I was, homosexuality was not part of the culture.

Homosexuality is considered a foreign or alien act. Homosexuality is what happens to other people's children or activities associated with occultism.

I was married and divorced with a child before I was 26 years old. The marriage broke down based on my confession of the truth, that I am gay; by this time I was in fear that I will lose my life and my family.

For many years, I kept a low profile but not without a troubled heart. I lived my life in pretence. I lived a double life, safeguarding any revelation of my sexual orientation. It became a secret that will haunt me for many more years.

I was outed at my local Pentecostal church. I was outed amongst heterosexual friends -- it became a revelation at work. This is painful and difficult for me to deal with, it was even more painful to deal with my family, as they are embittered towards me. I felt cornered. Having no one else to turn to, I turned to the Lord. Only then did I make peace with him and began to understand my pain and anguish was for a reason. I understood that I was to be the voice for those who suffered similar predicament.

And without a doubt, this testimony in the forum in which it is being delivered will have repercussions . . . It is not my intention to be a martyr, but simply to stand up and be counted and to highlight that I am ready to persevere, to speak up and pay the price for what I believe.
My purpose at this present time is to reach out to other gays and lesbians suffering persecution, to offer some hope and to let them know they are not alone. And without a doubt, this testimony in the forum in which it is being delivered will have repercussions, the extent of which I am not aware. However, I stand strong in my faith and belief that as a child of God all will be well.
It is not my intention to be a martyr, but simply to stand up and be counted and to highlight that I am ready to persevere, to speak up and pay the price for what I believe.

It has been acknowledged that more and more same-sex loving Nigerians -- both at home and abroad -- suffer immense prejudice, due to the cultural belief and lack of education about sexuality and tolerance towards people with a different sexuality.

The prohibition of homosexuality in Nigeria is not only confined to the letters of the legislation but is also denied as prevailing within the culture. [There is] a continuous attempt to deny or refuse to acknowledge that gays and lesbians make up a significant part of the population.
Homosexuality, as far as Nigeria is concerned, is an abuse of traditional values.

Parents in Nigeria will seldom accept their son or daughter is homosexual. It is commonly said, "I would rather have the corpse of my child than accept him or her to be homosexual." Steps are often taken to seek counselling, prayers, exorcism, casting out the evil, and binding the spirit of homosexuality, in an attempt to remove what is seen as a curse.

The prevailing view of churches in Nigeria believes that homosexuality defies the country's rich culture, and the practise of it will cause the individual to be ostracised.
Finally, the ultimate tenet of the Bible is love. It is my hope that this issue is debated with this in mind.

We - are - all - in - this - together. Thank you.

1 comment:

tallblkfun said...

I am also an Homosexual Nigerian, I now live in Los Angeles where I find myself more comfortable being what I am, I left Nigeria at the age of 29, where I live without understanding my true nature, I tired to date and see many women to remove and deny that part of me, I just couldn't find myself emotionally committed to them. It was hard for me, I joined a confraternity one of the most aggressive in Nigeria h just to prove my manhood to myself, I even went as far as to the level of decision making in this confraternity and was treated with a lot of respect,

Although I had belonged to a confraternity, I was still Anti social, I still felt that I didn’t belong, I had a few experience with men and that made me question and hate myself, in my young days is college. I thought I was wrong, Unnatural, and often threatened men that I have had certain experience with so that they do not out me in anyway because of my reputation in college as a true bad boy, Still I was unhappy being myself, It was wrong as far as I know, as far as I have heard and as far as the society and culture made me believe.

I now live in the USA, I feel freer now, free enough to be myself, But I still carry a fear that my family never find out, because I am from a family that in Nigeria are considered rich and powerful. I understand the ramification of being outted in Nigeria. I understand the strong family bonds that the Nigerian culture exemplifies, and I don’t intend to loose that bonding in totality, It is the Nigerian support system and if lost then I will be totally lost in the wild wind of nothingness, By choice I try to remove myself from my family, and only appear to fulfill my obligations to my family, It is a hard world to live, but it works for me, I am out to my American friends here, and they are my support system, but would have loved if it was different, Even living in the US I still have pains, I cannot even phantom how much more difficult it will be for Nigerians living in Nigeria with this life style.

This really is not a life style, it is more of the Human makeup that we cannot change even if we try, I have tried it, I have been there, I had no books that I read, I had no TV shows that I watched, I had no western influence that made me what I am. I grew up like everyone else, I just had a yearning, a need that I tried to bury for years, even since I was a child, and all attempts failed.

I pray that things begin to change in the Nigerian society, I pray that people are allowed to be what they truly are without any severe repercussion, It is my belief that homosexuality in Nigeria and most of African was and always had been acceptable in the African society and culture before the advent of foreign Islamic and Christian colonizers, the changes we now say is African is truly foreign to us. Look at the history of the African pagan rites and rituals, look at the acceptability of feminization of men and masculinization of women in some African religious practices and you will see that there is more to it than meets the eyes, research more into this behavior you may find that at one time homosexuality was probably acceptable, It is a belief that man 2 man or woman 2 woman sex had ritual significance, and that alone may show that maybe it was acceptable at one time in our history

We as Africans’ Nigerians have lost our way to foreign beliefs and practices and have made it our, progress can never be ours if we remain followers rather than leaders, Our strength is in our past only if we can go back to it and reinvent ourselves based on how own history, and maybe then we can truly become leaders